LOL, i do enjoy the excuses people make for their imaginary gods.since you brought up the bible i recommend you looking at luke 9:27But I tell you of a truth, there be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the kingdom of God.which means the "end times" have already come and gone, apparently you were born too late to make it.

LOL, i do enjoy the excuses people make for their imaginary gods.since you brought up the bible i recommend you looking at luke 9:27But I tell you of a truth, there be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the kingdom of God.which means the "end times" have already come and gone, apparently you were born too late to make it.

I bet a Christian could explain to us how it doesn't say what it says.

LOL, i do enjoy the excuses people make for their imaginary gods.since you brought up the bible i recommend you looking at luke 9:27But I tell you of a truth, there be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the kingdom of God.which means the "end times" have already come and gone, apparently you were born too late to make it.

Heard of the book of Revelations?Of course, in order to have an intelligent discussion about the Bible, we'd have to hypothetically assume that the Christian God exists. Would you be alright with that?

People don't think the universe be like it is, but it do.
-Black Science Man

LOL, i do enjoy the excuses people make for their imaginary gods.since you brought up the bible i recommend you looking at luke 9:27But I tell you of a truth, there be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the kingdom of God.which means the "end times" have already come and gone, apparently you were born too late to make it.

I bet a Christian could explain to us how it doesn't say what it says.

The only thing the Book of Revelations proves with any certainty is that they had LSD in the first century AD.

Ethang5: Children cannot be morons.
Skeptical1: The only thing you have demonstrated is they don't have a monopoly on it.

LOL, i do enjoy the excuses people make for their imaginary gods.since you brought up the bible i recommend you looking at luke 9:27But I tell you of a truth, there be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the kingdom of God.which means the "end times" have already come and gone, apparently you were born too late to make it.

I bet a Christian could explain to us how it doesn't say what it says.

The only thing the Book of Revelations proves with any certainty is that they had LSD in the first century AD.

No LSD. But plenty of magic mushrooms.

Fu-Ming: "So explain to us how wasps look like wasps 100 million years later. I'll wait".
Me: What part of the theory of evolution states that a species must change? I'll wait.
Fu-Ming: *crickets*

LOL, i do enjoy the excuses people make for their imaginary gods.since you brought up the bible i recommend you looking at luke 9:27But I tell you of a truth, there be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the kingdom of God.which means the "end times" have already come and gone, apparently you were born too late to make it.

I bet a Christian could explain to us how it doesn't say what it says.

The only thing the Book of Revelations proves with any certainty is that they had LSD in the first century AD.

Christianity was founded on the idea that the end of (this) world was just around the corner, and 'the end is nigh' is a Christian cliche that you don't find in other religions.Every generation of Christians have seen reasons to believe their's was the real end times, because at all times there are 'wars and rumours of wars', earthquakes floods and disasters. It only takes a little effort to make a seemingly plausible connection between a current event and a biblical verse - there is a quite a large industry actively doing that. A perusal of back numbers of watchtower from the 70s or 80s show how current worries about the cold war, over population and so on were the signs back then.

Christianity is at its heart a doomsday cult, although that's not all it is. But that does explain why every now and again 'millennialism' and apocalyptic cults and notions like the 'rapture' are so much a part of, and pretty much only of, Christianity.

LOL, i do enjoy the excuses people make for their imaginary gods.since you brought up the bible i recommend you looking at luke 9:27But I tell you of a truth, there be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the kingdom of God.which means the "end times" have already come and gone, apparently you were born too late to make it.

I bet a Christian could explain to us how it doesn't say what it says.

The only thing the Book of Revelations proves with any certainty is that they had LSD in the first century AD.

LOL, i do enjoy the excuses people make for their imaginary gods.since you brought up the bible i recommend you looking at luke 9:27But I tell you of a truth, there be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the kingdom of God.which means the "end times" have already come and gone, apparently you were born too late to make it.

I bet a Christian could explain to us how it doesn't say what it says.

The only thing the Book of Revelations proves with any certainty is that they had LSD in the first century AD.

I doubt that they did. Didn't have the chemicals to make it.Would you be willing to accept the hypothetical? DanMGTOW seems to have left this thread.

People don't think the universe be like it is, but it do.
-Black Science Man

At 9/20/2016 6:57:05 AM, keithprosser wrote:Christianity was founded on the idea that the end of (this) world was just around the corner, and 'the end is nigh' is a Christian cliche that you don't find in other religions.Every generation of Christians have seen reasons to believe their's was the real end times, because at all times there are 'wars and rumours of wars', earthquakes floods and disasters. It only takes a little effort to make a seemingly plausible connection between a current event and a biblical verse - there is a quite a large industry actively doing that. A perusal of back numbers of watchtower from the 70s or 80s show how current worries about the cold war, over population and so on were the signs back then.

Christianity is at its heart a doomsday cult, although that's not all it is. But that does explain why every now and again 'millennialism' and apocalyptic cults and notions like the 'rapture' are so much a part of, and pretty much only of, Christianity.

Don't dismiss this argument as the "no true Scotsman" fallacy, but...Are you talking of Catholic doctrine? Or early church teachings?

People don't think the universe be like it is, but it do.
-Black Science Man

LOL, i do enjoy the excuses people make for their imaginary gods.since you brought up the bible i recommend you looking at luke 9:27But I tell you of a truth, there be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the kingdom of God.which means the "end times" have already come and gone, apparently you were born too late to make it.

I bet a Christian could explain to us how it doesn't say what it says.

The only thing the Book of Revelations proves with any certainty is that they had LSD in the first century AD.

I doubt that they did. Didn't have the chemicals to make it.Would you be willing to accept the hypothetical? DanMGTOW seems to have left this thread.

Why not accept any hypothetical in that case? How about accepting the hypothetical that Thor is going to smash the earth with his supernatural hammer? We could make a list of a 1000 hypotheticals.

The book of revelations reads like the ramblings of a schizophrenic, and equally as useful. Somehow Christians think it is profound and spiritual even though they have no idea what it is talking about.

At 9/20/2016 6:57:05 AM, keithprosser wrote:Christianity was founded on the idea that the end of (this) world was just around the corner, and 'the end is nigh' is a Christian cliche that you don't find in other religions.Every generation of Christians have seen reasons to believe their's was the real end times, because at all times there are 'wars and rumours of wars', earthquakes floods and disasters. It only takes a little effort to make a seemingly plausible connection between a current event and a biblical verse - there is a quite a large industry actively doing that. A perusal of back numbers of watchtower from the 70s or 80s show how current worries about the cold war, over population and so on were the signs back then.

Christianity is at its heart a doomsday cult, although that's not all it is. But that does explain why every now and again 'millennialism' and apocalyptic cults and notions like the 'rapture' are so much a part of, and pretty much only of, Christianity.

Don't dismiss this argument as the "no true Scotsman" fallacy, but...Are you talking of Catholic doctrine? Or early church teachings?

Thousands upon thousands, upon thousands, upon thousands, upon thousands, upon thousands, upon thousands, upon thousands of years have been claimed to be the end of times.Just look, we are still here.bwuahahahahahahahahahaha.

"In times of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act".